A Return to the Gilded Age or just mere selfishness?
Robert Reich, in his recent column in the Christian Science Monitor, asks:
What kind of society, exactly, do modern Republicans want? […] They say they want a smaller government but that can’t be it. Most seek a larger national defense and more muscular homeland security. Almost all want to widen the government’s powers of search and surveillance inside the United States – eradicating possible terrorists, expunging undocumented immigrants, “securing” the nation’s borders. They want stiffer criminal sentences, including broader application of the death penalty. Many also want government to intrude on the most intimate aspects of private life.
They call themselves conservatives but that’s not it, either. They don’t want to conserve what we now have. They’d rather take the country backwards – before the 1960s and 1970s, and the Environmental Protection Act, Medicare, and Medicaid; before the New Deal, and its provision for Social Security, unemployment insurance, the forty-hour workweek, and official recognition of trade unions; even before the Progressive Era, and the first national income tax, antitrust laws, and Federal Reserve.
They’re not conservatives. They’re regressives. And the America they seek is the one we had in the Gilded Age of the late nineteenth century.
It could be that, or Republicans could just be selfish pricks who only want to enrich themselves and their rich friends the most they can, without any regard to the consequences.
Did you see ‘Children of Men?’ There is a scene in which the protagonist (played by Clive Owen) goes through a gate in order to ask a cousin for a favor. Life behind that wall strikes me as a real glimpse of the Republican utopia that they are working towards.